Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Rhymes And Rhythms - XXII by William Ernest Henley
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Rhymes And Rhythms - XXII

    By William Ernest Henley




    Trees and the menace of night;
    Then a long, lonely, leaden mere
    Backed by a desolate fell
    As by a spectral battlement; and then,
    Low-brooding, interpenetrating all,
    A vast, grey, listless, inexpressive sky,
    So beggared, so incredibly bereft
    Of starlight and the song of racing worlds
    It might have bellied down upon the Void
    Where as in terror Light was beginning to be.

    Hist!    In the trees fulfilled of night
    (Night and the wretchedness of the sky)
    Is it the hurry of the rain?
    Or the noise of a drive of the Dead
    Streaming before the irresistible Will
    Through the strange dusk of this, the Debateable Land
    Between their place and ours?

    Like the forgetfulness
    Of the work-a-day world made visible,
    A mist falls from the melancholy sky:
    A messenger from some lost and loving soul,
    Hopeless, far wandered, dazed
    Here in the provinces of life,
    A great white moth fades miserably past.

    Thro' the trees in the strange dead night,
    Under the vast dead sky,
    Forgetting and forgot, a drift of Dead
    Sets to the mystic mere, the phantom fell,
    And the unimagined vastitudes beyond.



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